If you haven’t heard of Gary then suffice it to say he is a successful social media and wine entrepreneur, sought after and entertaining speaker and best-selling author. You can also learn more about him in the bio below.

This interview makes up number forty-seven in the series of interviews with authors and business leaders that are doing great things and helping businesses innovate, become more social and deliver better service.

Also, this interview is part of Gary’s #1aDayQandA interview series where he has committed to giving 365 short interviews to different people about different topics over the course of this yearâ€¦some effort!

Hereâ€™s the highlights from the interview I did with Gary:

Business is human and people make emotional decisions

Gary wonders why more businesses don’t spend more time on customer retention rather than customer acquisition given that the economics points to the value in doing so.

The world has been driven more by IQ than EQ but this is changing

Gary believes that transformation of your business into being more customer centric has two essential elements.

One, your whole company belief system has to come from a place where you fundamentally care about your customers and it’s not just lip service.

Two, if businesses want to deliver better service and a better experience then they need to invest in it. And, that could mean cutting ineffective spend on things like advertising and spending more on people that actually deliver your service, your experience and scale your caring.

People often talk about how people and service doesn’t ‘scale’, especially on social media. However, Gary doesn’t necessarily agree with that and is more focused on using money in your business where it will generate returns. For example: rather than spending $3 million on a Superbowl ad why not hire 60 people at $50k a year to deliver better service on Twitter or other social media channels or give this budget to an agency to deliver it for you.

Something like this is not often considered or talked about in the business world as it refers to ‘non-working’ media ie. not advertising.

However, this is likely to become more and more talked about as more and more people realise that it is the human being that is delivering value to businesses.

That doesn’t mean that companies need to go out and hire lots of higher paid people to deliver better service as it’s not always about the amount that someone gets paid. Often and just as important is the attitude of the people and the atmosphere that you create for them. If you care for them then they are more likely to care for your customers.

Gary’s top three tips to transform your business into being more customer centric:

One, audit your business to find out what you are spending your money on (advertising, operations etc) for what return. Being able to afford to transform your business is just as important as wanting to transform your business. Gary believes that most organisations are spending 20-30% of their money for no return.

Two, take that 20-30% and invest in (more) people so that they can execute whatever you think is extraordinary service.

Three, restructure your organisation and leadership to be able to deliver on that and continue monitoring to make sure it is working.

Meet Gary Vaynerchuk, a 36 year old New York Times and Wall Street Journal Best-Selling author who is also a self-trained wine and social media expert. From a young age, it was clear that Gary was a businessman. At 8-years-old he was operating seven lemonade stands in his neighborhood and by 10 he had moved onto selling baseball cards at local malls. In high school while working at his family owned liquor store, Gary started reading The Wine Spectator and wine books, and realized collecting wine offered an allure similar to his previous hobby of collecting baseball cards. With a wealth of knowledge and an entrepreneurial spirit, Gary spent every weekend of his college years at his parentsâ€™ wine store. Recognizing the importance of e-commerce in 1997, Gary launched Winelibrary.com and helped grow his family business significantly from $3 million to $45 million by 2005.

In 2006, with a flipcam and NY Jets bucket Gary began Wine Library TV which revolutionized the wine world. His wine reviews soon attracted over 100,000 viewers each day and his die-hard fans nicknamed themselves â€œVayniacs.â€ Garyâ€™s cult-like following was the result of his unconventional, often irreverent commentary on wine. Using comical expressions like â€œSniffy Sniffâ€ and â€œThe Oakmonster,â€ he encourages straightforward wine tasting and debunks wine myths. A business visionary Gary also started Cinderella Wine, a flash sale website which features one wine per day beginning at 9PM EST for 24 hours sold at a severely discounted price.

Gary does not claim to be a â€˜techieâ€™, but in 2005, he began video blogging and is known as a true social media trailblazer! He has close to 1 million followers on Twitter and was included in BusinessWeekâ€™s list of the top 20 people every entrepreneur should follow. Garyâ€™s first business book Crush It! Why Now Is the Time to Cash in on Your Passion (October 2009) hit the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Associated Press Best-Sellers lists in its first weeks. It maps out Garyâ€™s road rules for how to â€œCrush Itâ€ in todayâ€™s business market by following your passion and building your own personal brand. His second New York Times bestseller The Thank You Economy(March 2011), details the effect of social media on business and has become required reading for business leaders. In the spring of 2009, Gary and his brother AJ launched VaynerMedia, a new breed of agency that helps Fortune 500 companies like Campbell Soup Company, PepsiCo, Green Mountain Coffee, the NY Jets, and the Brooklyn Nets find their social media voices and build their digital brands.

Gary has appeared on countless programs from Jimmy Fallon, Late Night with Conan Oâ€™Brien and Ellen to MSNBC, CNBC, CNN and NPR. He was also notably featured in Decanter Magazineâ€™s 2009 Power List which is a list of the 50 most influential people in wine and named Innovator of the Year at Wine Enthusiastâ€™s 2009 Wine Star Awards. Additionally, Gary was one of Askmen.comâ€™s 49 Most Influential Men of 2009.

Garyâ€™s ultimate goal is to own the New York Jets. Although his various businesses obviously play an enormous role in his life, he always puts his family first.